

From mobile apps and wearables to smartphones and sensors, digital health is on the rise. Powerful technologies capturing data continuously. Monitoring patients remotely. Relaying real-world insights at scale. Allowing us to reimagine evidence generation.
But how can researchers make the best use of these advances to reliably support data collection? There are many factors to consider in this fast-evolving landscape and very little guidance for decision making.
In collaboration with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), we’ve been exploring the opportunities for adopting digital health in registries. We’ve looked at mHealth, eHealth, social media and the Internet of Things to understand the current use of digital technologies, their strengths and limitations, their promising applications for the future, and how to determine their value.
For researchers considering a digital approach, this work suggests the importance of hearing from patients, future proofing against technology obsolescence, and making digital health a primary rather than additive solution. The process should start by asking the right questions to be certain that digital is a valid way forward.
As the capabilities of digital health continue to expand, leaders are envisioning a healthcare landscape transformed by patient-generated data. By investing now to develop the right skill sets and methodologies to leverage these technologies effectively, researchers can be ready to optimize the next decade of digital opportunities for data collection in registries.
To find out more about utilizing digital health in registries, download “21st Century Patient Registries: Addendum to Registries for Evaluating Patient Outcomes: A User's Guide, 3rd Edition.”